SNOW WHITE // THE GAZE
Snow White is a story preoccupied with the way its characters look at each other. The first queen sees the child she wants in her mind’s eye and then brings her forth just as pictured. The new queen (and stepmother) looks into a mirror that first confirms her need to be “the fairest of them all” and then shatters it. The same mirror allows her to watch Snow White from afar, stoking her obsession even when the girl is out of her literal sight. The external observation of Snow White’s beauty also works in her favor. It contributes to the huntsman’s hesitation and the dwarves’ willingness to take her in. Later it is the entire premise on which the prince becomes enamored and rescues Snow White from eternal sleep. The gaze of others, often mediated through glass (mirrors, windows, coffins), determines the trajectory of the narrative and Snow White’s fate.
It’s no surprise then that illustrated editions of Snow White tend to reproduce the same scenes over and over again. The examples in Dartmouth Library generate a standard set of images. The queen stares into her mirror. The dwarves gaze adoringly on Snow White. The girl herself regards the disguised queen with suspicion from her cottage window. Finally, the still-beautiful corpse of Snow White is interred in the glass coffin that allows others to continue observing her in a manner that is unimpeded by her death.
A great deal of ink has already been spilled on the act of looking in art. This is especially true in looking at women specifically, with the critic John Berger introducing the concept of a “male gaze” in art and theorist Laura Mulvey popularizing it for feminist film criticism. Edgar Allan Poe famously (and creepily) said that “The death [of] a beautiful woman is, unquestionably, the most poetical topic in the world.” Certainly, the illustrators of these renditions of Snow White thought so, though they didn’t limit themselves to the dead girl. They have focused primarily on vanity, voyeurism, and consumption, mirroring the themes of the tale in their approaches to rendering it.